It will be a beautiful summer day with a mix of sun and cloud and a high of 26C Wednesday.

Clouds are expected to move in by the afternoon with a 30 per cent chance of rain, according to Environment Canada.

The weather will continue to improve throughout the week with no rain expected in the immediate forecast and temperatures hovering around 26C.

Regular subway service has resumed between Keele and Ossington stations after an earlier closure at Lansdowne Station.

GO Transit was not reporting any major delays and flights in and out of Pearson and Billy Bishop Airport are running on schedule.

Events:

The Rogers Cup continues today at the Rexall Centre at York University. The tournament runs until Aug. 10 with matches also held in Montreal.

The Blue Jays take on the Baltimore Orioles tonight at 7 p.m. at the Rogers Centre.

TIFF in the Park continues Wednesday at David Pecaut Square. Directed by Wim Wenders’ Pina is a tribute to the late modern dance great Pina Bausche. There will also be a special live performance by the Peggy Baker Dance Projects at 8:30 p.m. The film begins at 9 p.m. and is free.

A Canadian professor backpacking through Burma was forced to leave the Southeast Asian country because of a Buddha tattoo on his leg. According to the Canadian Press, a local photographed the tattoo before posting it online where the image went viral.

Canada’s tennis darling, Eugenie Bouchard, was eliminated from the Rogers Cup by American Shelby Rogers in the second round Tuesday night in Montreal. The 20-year-old from Westmount, Que., who sits in the top-10 in WTA rankings was expected to do well after her success at a number of Grand Slam tournaments this year.

A United Nation official said Tuesday that the month-long Gaza offensive has had a “catastrophic and tragic impact” on Palestinian children and will require hundreds of millions of dollars in reconstruction costs. It comes as a 72-hour cease-fire moves into its second day and Palestinian and Israeli officials met in Cairo to discuss a broader ceasefire.

Did you know:

The U.K. remains Toronto's largest overseas visitor market with 201,000 arrivals in 2013, according to figures from Tourism Toronto. Chinese visitors to Toronto increased by 58 per cent since 2010 accounting for 181,000 visitors to the Toronto region in 2013.

A look back:

On Aug. 6, 1991 Ontario became the first province to recognized First Nations right to self government under Premier Bob Rae.

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